> I tried doing what you suggested, but now it gives me the error > 'RegexURLResolver' object has no attribute 'rindex' when I try to go > to the admin page (or any page that exists, for that matter. Pages > that don't exist get an unhandled exception).
Can you show us your url setup as you have it now? It may be something else. From a quick Google, it may also be a problem depending on the Django version; which version are you using? > Also, I'm not sure if your solution will fix my problem. Django should > never receive the /~mysite/ part of the url becuase its root is that > folder (ie, http://www.university.edu/~mysite/index/ is seen in Django > as /index/). Django strips the domain part (and the GET parameters), leaving '~mysite/index/' as what to match (unless somebody else on this list corrects me, but I didn't found this documented). So you'll need to take out the ~mysite yourself, which is what urls.py does (though the media url setting would need to be adjusted for that). I'm doing exactly the same thing as you, other than that my 'prefix' isn't precisely ~mysite, but I'm still stripping it out before matching for views. Works for me. >>> I'm trying to set up my site on a university webspace, so the root >>> is >>> a subdirectory, iewww.university.edu/~mysite/. Because of this, I'm >>> having trouble logging into the admin pages. I go >>> towww.university.edu/~mysite/admin/ >>> and get the login page, but when I try to login, it goes to >>> www.university.edu/admin/because the form posts to the relatvie >>> url / >>> admin/. Any ideas how to fix this? Anyone else have this problem? >> >> Not a problem to me really, as here's how I fixed it: >> >> urls.py: >> >> from django.conf.urls.defaults import * >> from django.conf import settings >> import sys >> >> if 'runserver' in sys.argv: >> urlpatterns = patterns('', >> # special URLs >> (r'^mysitemedia/(?P<path>.*)$', 'django.views.static.serve', >> {'document_root': settings.MEDIA_ROOT}), # This may have to >> be different, eg '^~mysite/media/' or so (but be careful the admin >> and >> your own media don't clash). >> >> # normal URLs >> url(r'^~mysite/', include('mysite.mysiteurls')), # Here, I >> pick out the base url >> ) >> else: >> urlpatterns = patterns('', url(r'^~mysite/', >> include('mysite.mysiteurls')),) >> >> and mysiteurls.py: >> >> from django.conf.urls.defaults import * >> >> urlpatterns = patterns('', >> # special URLs >> (r'^admin/', include('django.contrib.admin.urls')), >> >> # normal URLs >> url(r'^users/', include('mysite.users.urls')), >> . >> . >> . >> url(r'^', include('mysite.main.urls')), >> ) >> >> Lastly, in settings.py, I have defined a ROOT_URL and some >> redefinitions for the user stuff: >> ROOT_URL = '/~mysite/' >> LOGIN_URL = ROOT_URL + 'users/login/' >> LOGOUT_URL = ROOT_URL + 'users/logout/' >> LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL = ROOT_URL + 'users/profile/' >> >> Note: I have put '~mysite' in various places, but since I actually >> simply use 'mysite', I may have done some incorrect substitutions. So >> do doublecheck. >> But in principal this should work, and with the proper setup for the >> media, you can use the same url configuration for a development and >> production server. > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Django users" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/django-users?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

